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Archaeologists in Stuttgart, Germany, uncovered over 100 horse skeletons believed to have been part of a Roman cavalry unit.
Roughly 1,800 years ago, a Roman cavalry horse died of unknown causes. The animal’s human rider, a Roman soldier, buried the ...
“The history of mankind is carried on the back of a horse” is a saying that holds true for the Roman Empire, which expanded ...
The site, which likely once housed a roman cavalry unit, shows evidence of the respect soldiers had for their mounts.
During the first half of the 2nd century AD, Bad Cannstatt, near the discovery site, was a major Roman military hub in ...
The discovery of a Roman horses’ graveyard shows a soldier’s grief at the loss of his equine partner, 1,800 years later. An excavation carried out by the state office for monument preservation (LAD) ...
The Household Cavalry Mounted Regiment take part ... do a wide variety of things - including inspecting a horse painted to look like a skeleton. That was the task that befell Britain's Queen ...
Currently, the articulated skeleton can be seen on display in at the International ... The officers of the 7th Cavalry, wanting to preserve the horse, asked Lewis Lindsay Dyche of the University of ...
Archaeologists from the State Office for Monument Preservation of the Stuttgart Regional Council have found the remains of ...
Over 100 Roman horses discovered in Stuttgart reveal rare insights into ancient cavalry life, soldier-animal bonds, and a ...